If you meant different primes then 2*3 = 6
If you did meant primes, but not necessarily different, then 2*2 = 4
If you meant different integers then 1*2 = 2
If you meant integers, but not necessarily different, then 1*1 = 1
And if you did not mean integers, then there is no such number. Your search will take you to infinitesimally small fractions - closer and closer to 0 but never actually reaching it.
All of the above assume that the numbers being multiplied together are positive. If not, the answer will tend to minus infinity.
Composite numbers
All nonzero numbers have multiples. Any two numbers will have an infinite number of multiples in common. The smallest of these is known as the least common multiple, or LCM.
Every nonzero number has multiples. Every set of nonzero numbers has an LCM.
"a whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers is a ___ of the numbers" The answer is "Common Factor". "a whole number that is a factor of two or more nonzero whole numbers." from Ch. 4 - Factors, Fractions, and Exponents, link provided.
A nonzero multiple of a number is a multiple which is not equal to 0.
The smallest number that is a multiple of two or more numbers is called the least common multiple, or LCM.
That's the least common multiple, or LCM.
It is the smallest number that is a multiple of all the numbers in the set. Or to put it another way, it is the smallest number divisible by all the numbers in the set.
All nonzero numbers have factors. Some numbers have some of the same factors as other numbers. These are common factors. All nonzero numbers have 1 as a factor. The least common factor of any set of positive integers is 1.
4 is a multiple of three numbers.
The least common multiple - that's the smallest multiple that they all have in common
No, because the number of common multiples of any two nonzero numbers is infinite.
The product of two nonzero whole numbers will be a nonzero whole number.